GENERAL MENTION. Bits of Labor News Gathered Chiefly With the Scissors. The union label that's all. Look for the union label. If it is not labeled, refuse it. Union made shoes are sold by Hog Hi & Perkins. Thlrty-slx unions, out of a total of forty-six In Duluth, Minn., are affiliated with the trades assembly. Fall River (Mass.) weavers have ac cepted a compromise that 47 1-2 yards constitute a cut, and the threatened strike is off. San Francisco (Cal.) Stone Cutters' Union, 'through its executive commit- tee, has decided to submit Its differ ences with employers to arbitration. 'Salem has been decided on as the place for holding the semi-annual con vention of the Steam Engineers' unions of Massachusetts, Qecember The Consolidated Granite company, of Winston, has closed ia deal by which It will control the Balfour pink granite quarry in Rowan county, near Salisbury. The largest shipbuilding firms are to be found in the Baltic ports; large firms have also established themselves on the Elbe and Weser. The trouble which existed in Pitts burg with several contractors is set tled. The men have returned to work under the 1907 agreement. They got everything they asked for. It Is believed that if all the labor unions of San Francisco, Cal., were to join in a common cause a great hos pital could be erected and maintained at a comparatively small cost per capi ta. The broommakers' union of San Francisco Is making a fight against convict-made brooms. It has asked organized labor not to purchase any broom that does not bear the union stamp. The Coast Seamen's Journal says that the San Francisco Street Rail way company has issued a bunch of three-year notes for $1,500,000 at six per cent to meet the cost of the strike in that city. The convention of the Iron Moulders' Union of North America concluded Its sessions at Philadelphia on August 9. President Joseph Valentine and the olhr officers were re-electd by unani mous vote. All the bookbinders in St. Joseph, Mo., have joined the local union and the employers have signified their willingness to sign up and the out come will be a closed shop in all the binderies. The Wisconsin assembly has passed a bill limiting the hours for railroad telegraphers to eight hours a day, and has also passed a law giving street railway employes a ten-hour day within twelve. Fifty Russian women employed as fruit cutters at the Griffin Skelly can nery at Fresno, Cal., stormed the can nery cn August 15 after they had walked out, having been refused a de mand for higher wages. The long-threatened tie-up of the buihling industries of Washington, D. C, reached a crisis on August 8, when the carpenters, bricklayers and other union workmen employed on buildings went on strike. The movement for the stamping out of tuberculosis has become na tional. Tuberculosis has for many years been the scourge of the print- Ing trade. It Is believed by the union printers that unsanitary and badly ventilated composing rooms are re sponsible for much of the tuberculo sis that exists among them, and they DISEASE BREEDING PLAGES IN AND AROUND YOUR HOME Cm ki nidi kimliu by regular lltlaftettiU. W tan tviry - entity. Chloride of Lime, lb .15c Solution of Chlorides, bottle, . .60c Formalhdehyde, per pint 3Tc Sulfur, per lb 10c Sulfur and Formaldehyde Can dles 25c Sulfur Candles 6c Formaldehyde Fumigators ... 15c Hydrauapthal Pastillis, box. . 25c Carbolic Crystals, per lb 45c PHONE YOUR WANTS. RECTOR'S PHARMACY TWELFTH AND O ST. propose to see to it that they are not made victims of a disease that in nearly all cases spells death. Some 70,000 Scotch miners have re newed their demand for an advance in wages of 12 1-2 per cent. The present tes amount to about 6 shillings i pence a clay in wages, so that the de mand is considerable. No sign of a trades union label has been found earlier than 1874. It ap pears to be wholly of American origin, nor is any evidence at hand that unions elsewhere, except in Canada, show special interest in it. Corporation laborers of Calgary, Canada, have received an increase from 25 to 27 cents an hour, and it has been decided by the city council that eight hours shall constitute a working day, except in cases of necessity. A call for a conference of textile manufacturers and labor representa tives in all southern states, to be held in Nashville on October 14, to consider the question of child labor, has been isued by Governor Patterson of Tennessee. The master plumbers and represen tatives of the buildings now being erected at Goldfield, Nev., have taken determined stand against the de mands of the journeymen plumbers for an increase in wages from $8 to $9 a day. Sixteen elevator men of the twenty- story Empire building Broadway and Rector street, New York city, went on strike on August 8. They want higher pay and shorter hours. They are getting $55 a month for ten hours nd a half a -lay. The Springfield (Mass.) street car men now ask for a sliding scale from $2.25 to $2.75 a day, the wage to in crease from the $2.25 minimum by 10 cents for each year's service until the maximum is reached after the sixth ear. The convention of theatrical stage mployes, held recently In Norfolk, a., had before It a proposition to es tablish a sick benefit fund, also a fu neral benefit fund. It was decided to submit this to the subordinate bodies for a referendum vote. The Glass Bottle Blowers' associa tion has a membership of 13,000 and its assets are approaching the' million dollar mark. There have been no trikes for fifteen years, and that body is now one of the strongest la bor" organizations in the world. Boilermakers employed by the South- rn Pacific Railroad company at Los Angeles, Cal., went on strike on Au gust 7 to force the discharge of an ob- nbxious forman and for other con sessions. The str-ike has spread and may involve the entire system. Large crews of men have been going to the West through the Minneapolis (Minn.) employment offices for a long time, Montana, Idaho, Wyoming, Washington and Oregon taking the bulk. The work supplied is under stood to be railroad building. The struggle of the Lithographic Artists, Engravers and Designers' Lea gue with the National Association of Employing Lithographers, which be gan In August, 1906, is reported to have ended as the result of the aband onment of the fight by the union. A rather serious situation has arisen in the Northumberland (England) coal field by the determination of the members of the Miners' Association to strike against non-unionists. The council is not favorable to such ac tion, but they may have to give in to the popular demand; and it is feared that a strike may take place against non-unionists. . The fifth general convention of the International Hod Carriers' and Build ing Laborers' Union of America will held in Central Labor Union ball, corner Bank and City Hall avenue, the city of Norfolk, Virginia, be nning the second Monday in Septem ber, September 9th, 1907, at 9 o'clock. and will continue in session from day o day until the business of the con tention is completed. O00000000000 OOOOOOOOOOGO00-K30O000O000 8 Your Mends May Know and Appreciate Your Many Good Qualities But strangers must judge from your general appear ance. No matter whether you are at or away from home, your clothes should argue for rather than against you. There are plenty of the right sort of clothes to be had, so there is no real excuse for a man not appearing as well as he should. We sell fine clothes; they are all wool to the last right and full of good looks and style. kind of clothes that will help you to make the right sort of impresion among strangers; besides, pleasing your friends. What these clothes cost is less than what they are worth. i i fibre, tailored They are the fiigh-Grade Suits and Overcoats $15.00, $18.00, $20.00, $22.50, $25.00 and up to $40.00 This Week We are Featuring Some Special Values in Men's Suits and Overcoats Strictly FirstClass and HighGrade, at $7.50, $10.00, $12.50 and $15.00 No Such Values Were Ever Offered the Men of Nebraska Before Armstrong Clothing Good Ciothes Merchants Company FOR THE PRINTER MAN. Union Eafo 1418 O ST. OPEN DAY AND NIGHT 3 A Little Warm Stuff Server Up for a Cool Evening' Reading. The printer man who furnished the copy for the Butte page in the Hot Springs souvenir was a prophet. At the top of the page, in big display type, were the words, "WE GOT OURS." And you bet they did! It took the con vention about a minute to hand Butte a lemon big enough to be seen as far away as Toronto. And as the lemon was passed we were quite sure we heard a chuckle across the far stretch of territory that separated the East man hotel from Shelby Smith's editor- ial den in Philadelphia. You bet Butte got "her's." The organization committee of the Hot Springs convention submitted the following recommendation, which was adopted: "We recommend that local unions and the membership in general use their best endeavors to discourage and prevent the free discussion of union business in public resorts, to the end that our debates may be con fined to our union halls and other pro per places." O. piffle! Is that what we are paying out good money lor.' Did the proposition to have the ap peals committee elected by the conven vention go through? Well, hardly! President Lynch led the fight -against the proposition, and he was backed up by Secretary Bramwood and Chair man Tracy of the laws committee. To let the convention elect that committee might prevent the executive council from wielding quite so much arbitrary power, and that, of course would never do. And a convention made up of in telligent men actually turned down a proposition that no honest, justice lov ing believer in fair play could object to. But the "big chief" didn't want it, and when he took snuff a majority of the delegates sneezed. The "New Orleans proposition" was so fair and so just that the executive council knew it could not .fight it squarely on the floor. But It did not have to. It just gave the laws com mittee the hint, and Tracey and his committee held it back until the clos ing hours of the convention, when there was not time to give it even cursory consideration. That's only one way the executive council has of 'enforcing its will." ' Xate Newman of New York says the most pathetic sight he saw in a city of cripples and incurables was that of "Who Go Miller wandering about the streets with a vacant stare in his eyes, looking for the executive council." Nate is such a joker. ' Frank Swigart stopped a visitor to say: "I've just come from a chiropo dist's; my feet are in bad shape." J J. Dirks came by just in time to hear it and quietly remarked: "I never be fore knew that a chiropodist could do anything for cold feet." the Scottish Weavers went to prison for directing a strike to secure wages Hied by a justice of the peace and refused by employers. As late as 1817 ten delegates of the Calico Printers of Boston were jailed for meeting to consider the question of wages. At a meeting in Boston in 1832, merchants and shipowners subscribed a twenty thousand dollar fund to fight the movement for a ten-hour day. Horace Mann, Robert Rantoul, James G. Carter and Wendell Phillips sided with the work people. Mr. Randall defended the journeymen bootmakers in an important case which was de cided for them in 1842, and finally established the right of workingmen to combine. Machinists' Journal. NOT LONG AGO. Hew "Agitators" Were Treated Less Than a Century Gone. In 1812 the Central Committee of mont Daily Herald. ocooooooexxcocxxxxxxKXxxoo PROTECT YOUR HOPE WITH A POLICY IN THE Western Firo Insuranco Company Purely a Nebraska Company GOOD FOR SHEA. Few of the workers will not take off their hats to Shea, the aggressive leader of the teamsters, when , they read the following, which brands him a-- a fighter and union man. Regard ing the election of Tobin, Shea had this to say: "Mr. Tobin has won. After October 1, when he takes office, I publicly announce that he will have my assistance and support. 1 will aid him in every way I am able, and he will find me a staunch supporter in every move for the advancement of the union." Erie Labor Journal. Its Stockholders are among the Best Business Men of Lincoln and Nebraska 8 Capital Stock - -Cash Loans and Securities $1,000,000.00 $102,330.25 OFFICERS AND DIRECTORS Allen W. Field, President, P. F. Zimmer, Secretary. E. A. Becker, V. P. and Manager, W. H. England, Vice President, Jno. T. Zimmer, ( . Treasurer, C. W. Sanford, J. A. Frawley. Patronize This Worthy Home Company ' Home Office No. 201 So. 11 Street. BOTH PHONES CASH AS SOON AS LOSS IS ADJUSTED )OOOOCOCOCOCVXCOOCOOOOOOCOCO SPARE OUR BLUSHES. The Wageworker, Will M. Maupin's lr.bor paper of Lincoln, blossomed out beautifully in honor of Labor Day, and was, in fact, one of the most in teresting special editions of the sea son. Organized labor all over the .state may well feel proud of The Wageworker and its big editor. Fre- GREEN GABLES The Dr. Benj. F. Bally Sanatorium Lincoln, Nebraska T For non-contagious chronic diseases. Largest, best equipped, most beautifully furnished. Subscribe Now, $ o o o